Ukraine protesters call brief truce for new talks with president Viktor Yanukovich

Fri 24 Jan 2014, 12:30 AM AEDT

Gallery

Ukraine protests - in pictures

Anti-government protesters in Ukraine have agreed to a brief truce in clashes with police while new talks take place between opposition leaders and president Viktor Yanukovich.

Protesters have been bombarding police with petrol bombs and cobblestones in Kiev since Sunday.

The Interfax news agency says demonstrators have told opposition leader Vitaly Klitschko they would suspend further action until later Thursday (local time).

Mr Klitschko is one of three opposition leaders who has been leading demonstrations against Mr Yanukovich since November, when he pulled out of signing a free trade deal with the European Union in favour of closer economic ties with Russia.

The unrest swelled into peaceful mass rallies against the four-year rule of Mr Yanukovich which turned violent on Sunday when hard-core radicals broke away from the main protest area in the capital Kiev and clashed violently with riot police.

Three people have been killed on the side of protesters - two of them from gunshot wounds - and more than 150 police have been injured in the worst street violence in post-war Kiev.

Interfax said protesters agreed after Mr Klitschko went to the barricades where protesters are confronting police from behind a curtain of black smoke from burning tyres and appealed to them to observe a truce.

The new round of talks will be between Mr Yanukovich and Mr Klitschko, former economy minister Arseny Yatsenyuk and far-right nationalist Oleh Tyahnibok.

In an initial round of talks on Wednesday, Mr Yanukovich refused to make any real concessions to opposition leaders' demands for the dismissal of his government and repeal of sweeping anti-protest laws rammed through parliament by government loyalists last week.